Interesting bit of trivia, I guess. But how does this work in the favor of the biblical "explanation"? Help me put it in the context of your religious tale..bob b said:The latest research is showing that 99% of both bacteria and viruses are either harmless to humans or beneficial. And the ones that are harmful are mutants that probably were originally harmless or beneficial.
snowy said:Were such harmful mutations "designed" by the Demiurge after The Fall, or they were designed from the beginning and expected to occur "naturally" even in the Edenic environment, but He simply removed people's "Edenic" immunity to such mutants?
Do you think that we can linearly extrapolate back 7,000 years ago and deduce that the shield was some five times stronger back in the day?but there is one piece of hard scientific evidence that intriques me:namely the Earth's magnetic field, which shields us from the mutation causing effects of cosmic rays, has been declining rapidly, 10% since it first started to be directly measured (about 150 years ago).
Johnny, if I'm not mistaken the claim is an exponential decline, not a linear one!Johnny said:Do you think that we can linearly extrapolate back 7,000 years ago and deduce that the shield was some five times stronger back in the day?
bob b said:Our Humanness: Gene Sequence, Gene Activity, or Something More? 04/24/2001
Both Nature and Scientific American summarized today the flavor of discussions from the Human Genome Meeting that just concluded in Edinburgh; apparently, it is not the sequence of our genes, but the amount of activity in the way they are expressed, that makes us human. Gene sequences between humans and chimpanzees differ by as little as 1.3%. Something else is clearly involved in making us what we are. A German scientist found that although the sequences of genes in apes and people are similar, their expression in the brain is poles apart. The genomes of all mammals are so similar that “it’s hard to understand how they can produce such different animals, says Sue Povey, who works on human gene mapping at University College London in England. What drives similar genes to have such divergent degrees of expression, if it is not DNA? No one knows. On April 27, ABC News posted a story about the relation of the genome to the “proteome,” the protein library, with some illustrations of how proteins work.
We are seeing a major paradigm shift in the works. For years we have assumed that differences in the genetic code (genotype) account for the differences in body plan (phenotype) and behavior. Apparently, things are not so simple. There is no correlation between size of the genome and complexity of the organism, as explained in a recent ICR News Commentary: a single-celled Paramecium, for instance, has twice the DNA of a human. We are likely to see a whirlwind of new theories to explain the connection between our DNA and ourselves. Don’t expect to find a soul encoded in A, C, G, or T.
bob b said:Eye Neurons See Their Way to the Brain 04/20/2001
Through a series of clever experiments on frogs and fruit flies, researchers at the University of Utah have identified some of the genes responsible for the development of eyes and their nerve connections to the brain. Without the genes, the neurons seem to get lost and go in circles, but with the gene, the neurons “see” their way to the proper connection point in the brain.
How do microscopic neurons know where to drive their growing tips to the proper destination? Imagine hundreds of computer cables in a tangled mass moving unerringly to the right socket so that a computer network comes to life, and you get an idea of the complexity involved in a lowly tadpole’s optic nerve. The genes provide detailed instructions to the growing neuron tip to guide it through the maze of chemical signals. See also our March 8 story on this subject.
At last we agree on something.bob b said:(Some people cannot see something even when it is staring them right in the face)
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Haven't you heard? God just waved his hands and *POOOOOF* there was life.stipe said:in the beginning there was one little bunch of cells that were able to reproduce ...
4 billion years later after X* stages of evolution we have life as we know it.
what is 4 billion divided by X?
*X = im not sure how to express this ... the number of mutation/natural selection cycles necessary to account for everything bob is posting
*X = im not sure how to express this ... the number of mutation/natural selection cycles necessary to account for everything bob is posting
i know what youre saying and i wish youd just come out and say it ...bob b said:I sympathize because everything prior to the appearance of multicell creature fossils seems to be missing (cells do not seem to fossilize very well, except in dinosaur bones where they don't seem to even deteriorate). And yet, as this thread is demonstrating, all the "heavy poofing" (cells) seems to have taken place in that unknown period.BTW, this review of the book, Implausible Life, sounds interesting:http://www.ridgenet.net/~do_while/sage/v10i12f.htm
bob b said:BTW, this book review, Implausible Life, sounds interesting:
http://www.ridgenet.net/~do_while/sage/v10i12f.htm